Search/Recent Changes
DBTropes
...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!

The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)

 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
type
TVTItem
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
label
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
page
ThePhantomOfTheOpera
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
comment
Since The Phantom of the Opera was written by French author Gaston Leroux between 1909 and 1910, it has been adapted for film and television many times.The original work The novel that started it all.Adaptations with their own pages The famous 1925 silent film by Universal starring Lon Chaney The 1943 film, also by Universal starring Claude Rains The 1962 film by Hammer Productions starring Herbert Lom. The 1983 film, made for TV and starring Maximilian Schell. The darker and gorier 1989 film by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer starring Robert Englund. The 1990 NBC two-part TV miniseries, starring Charles Dance as the Phantom.... ... which was the result of Maury Yeston and Arthur Kopit's reworking of their musical (overshadowed by Lloyd Webber), which eventually premiered as Phantom. The wildly, wildly successful musical by Andrew Lloyd Webber... ... which spun off to a film adaptation in 2004. The Italian 1998 version, Il Fantasma dell'Opera directed by Dario Argento, in which the Phantom was raised by sewer rats and isn't even disfigured A 2018 visual novel adaptation by MazM.Other Phantom-based works with their own pages Phantom of the Paradise, a very loose, modernised, Rock Opera film adaptation of the story from 1974. Also includes elements of Faust and The Picture of Dorian Gray. KISS Meets the Phantom of the Park, a 1978 Made-for-TV movie starring you-know-who. The band would prefer not to talk about it. Love Never Dies (the sequel musical to the original Phantom musical) The Phantom of Manhattan (a Frederick Forsyth novel based upon original plans for a sequel) Phantom, a 1990 take on the original novel by Susan Kay The novel Maskerade is a Discworld parody of the story. The Return of the Phantom, a 1993 PC game created by Raymond Benson. The Phantom of the Opera is a 1990 arcade pinball game by Data East, based on the original novel. The Phantom Reviewer is mainly a fannish review series, but its framing story is a straight parody of Phantom tropes. Angels of Music is a Massive Multiplayer Crossover centred around the Phantom as a 19th-century Parisian Charlie Townsend. In the crossover webcomic Ugly Club, the Phantom is the main character and leader of the titular support group.Other adaptations include The first was a German production, which has since been lost. Song at Midnight, a 1937 Chinese adaptation which takes a several liberties with the original story, most notably the Phantom's love interest is no longer a singer, while his pupil is a separate male character, and also shoehorns in a very pro-leftist message. The film was popular to warrant a sequel and four remakes, and is considered to be China's first horror film. The Phantom of Hollywood, which turns the character into a disfigured actor who commits murders on the backlot of a bankrupt film studio, hoping to prevent its redevelopment. Phantom of the Mall: Eric's Revenge, a 1989 slasher film that relocates the story to, well, The Mall. The Canary Trainer by Nicholas Meyers sees Sherlock Holmes investigating the mystery of the Phantom when he finds himself in Paris during the Great Hiatus. Phantom, a 1990 novel by Susan Kay, is Erik's autobiography in which he describes his life prior to the events of Phantom of the Opera. In it, Erik's obsession with Christine is explained away with the Freudian Excuse that she is a Doppelgänger of Erik's beautiful but rejecting mother. In 2017, the Muppets Meet The Classics book series began with their version of the book, naturally plugging Muppet characters into the original novel.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
fetched
2023-10-14T17:29:47Z
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
parsed
2023-10-14T17:29:48Z
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
processingComment
Dropped link to Discworld: Not a Feature - ITEM
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
processingComment
Dropped link to InNameOnly: Not a Feature - ITEM
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
processingComment
Dropped link to Phantom: Not a Feature - ITEM
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
processingComment
Dropped link to TheMuppets2011: Not a Feature - ITEM
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
processingComment
Dropped link to ThePhantomOfTheOpera1962: Not a Feature - ITEM
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
processingComment
Dropped link to ThePhantomOfTheOpera1989: Not a Feature - ITEM
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
isPartOf
DBTropes
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_197b546a
type
Scarpia Ultimatum
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_197b546a
comment
Scarpia Ultimatum: "His life is now the prize that you must earn. So, do you end your days with me, or do you send him to his grave?" Raoul throws this back in the Phantom's face with "Why make her lie to you to save me?"
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_197b546a
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_197b546a
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_197b546a
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_1b4e322c
type
Mr. Fanservice
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_1b4e322c
comment
Mr. Fanservice: The various actors who have played Erik and Raoul. (But not Lon Chaney!)
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_1b4e322c
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_1b4e322c
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_1b4e322c
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_2cac89cf
type
The Ingenue
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_2cac89cf
comment
The Ingenue: Christine is the epitome of this, except in the 1943 film, where she's a well-adjusted, career-minded girl. Carlotta even lampshades Christine's ingenue status in the musical right before "Prima Donna":
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_2cac89cf
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_2cac89cf
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_2cac89cf
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_33d5b7f2
type
Adapted Out
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_33d5b7f2
comment
Adapted Out: The Persian and Raoul's unfortunate older brother... except in the Lon Chaney version in the former's case and the Dario Argento version in the latter's case.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_33d5b7f2
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_33d5b7f2
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_33d5b7f2
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_44f5d199
type
Pretty in Mink
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_44f5d199
comment
Pretty in Mink: Carlotta wears a fur or two in about every other adaptation.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_44f5d199
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_44f5d199
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_44f5d199
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_49d59be9
type
Scenery Porn
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_49d59be9
comment
Scenery Porn: The sets and special effects of the musical (most infamously the chandelier) were groundbreaking for their time and still impress today. They may be flashy and overwrought, but they're done spectacularly well. The Opera House set built for the 1925 film was an extraordinarily elaborate set for its day. Although the sound stage was finally demolished by Universal in 2014, the set was put in storage and reportedly still exists today, and was used for, believe it or not, The Muppets (2011).
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_49d59be9
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_49d59be9
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_49d59be9
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_4fe1aa4c
type
Gorgeous Period Dress
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_4fe1aa4c
comment
Gorgeous Period Dress: Everywhere you look, but especially on Carlotta and Christine.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_4fe1aa4c
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_4fe1aa4c
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_4fe1aa4c
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_5190aa9b
type
Theatre Phantom
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_5190aa9b
comment
Theatre Phantom: Erik is the Trope Maker.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_5190aa9b
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_5190aa9b
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_5190aa9b
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_557838d1
type
Adaptational Attractiveness
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_557838d1
comment
Adaptational Attractiveness: Gerard Butler's Phantom in the film version is rather less ugly than his stage counterparts, to the point that film critic Richard Roeper quipped "He's the Fashionably-Scarred Stud of the Opera." Peter Jöback who plays the part on West End between March and September of 2012 originally auditioned to play the Phantom on Broadway but was rejected because he was considered too good looking for the part. He was offered the part of Raoul instead, turned it down and was then contacted by Andrew Lloyd Webber who asked him to come play the role in London. In Dario Argento's film version, the Phantom has no facial disfigurement at all.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_557838d1
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_557838d1
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_557838d1
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_668d2146
type
Progressively Prettier
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_668d2146
comment
Progressively Prettier: The various movie adaptations provide the image for this trope. Lon Chaney has a freakishly deformed skull-head. Claude Rains has one side of his face badly scarred. Gerard Butler looks like he fell asleep in a tanning booth with the right side of his face up. Averted with the tragedy◊ wrought upon the beauty that is Ramin Karimloo◊
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_668d2146
featureApplicability
-1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_668d2146
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_668d2146
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_68068108
type
Evil Laugh
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_68068108
comment
Evil Laugh: In the stage version, the Phantom breaks out in mad laughter first when he ruins Carlotta's performance and later when he crashes the chandelier. In the silent film, Lon Chaney proves you don't even need sound to let loose with an Evil Laugh. In Maskerade, the Phantom (one of them, at least) writes down an Evil Laugh. With five exclamation marks, nonetheless!!!!! This lampshaded by one of the characters. (Opera will do that to a man.)
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_68068108
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_68068108
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_68068108
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_7315fd38
type
Covers Always Lie
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_7315fd38
comment
Covers Always Lie: The artwork for the Las Vegas production features the Phantom bending seductively over...a blonde woman in a red dress with copious cleavage who generally looks nothing like the stage incarnation of Christine. The Dario Argento version has a masked Phantom, weeping blood, on the VHS and DVD cover. The Phantom in this film has no facial deformity at all, and therefore doesn't wear a mask. The iconic poster for the Broadway musical shows a white mask that covers the entire upper face, rather than the half-mask used in the production. The full mask was originally part of the costume, but was scrapped at the last minute due to technical difficulties and survives only in the poster.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_7315fd38
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_7315fd38
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_7315fd38
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_7ea8f5ce
type
Knight in Shining Armor
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_7ea8f5ce
comment
Knight in Shining Armor: Raoul, obviously.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_7ea8f5ce
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_7ea8f5ce
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_7ea8f5ce
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_803e3201
type
Satanic Archetype
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_803e3201
comment
Satanic Archetype: The Angel of Music is another name for The Devil. The Phantom is Milton-esque figure who lives underground in a freezing lake (a la Dante) coming up to enchant and abduct beautiful innocent maidens. He is an Expy for Lucifer.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_803e3201
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_803e3201
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_803e3201
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_91d3ab1e
type
Ominous Pipe Organ
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_91d3ab1e
comment
Ominous Pipe Organ: And how!
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_91d3ab1e
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_91d3ab1e
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_91d3ab1e
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_947ac4b0
type
White Mask of Doom
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_947ac4b0
comment
White Mask of Doom: Found in the musical and several film versions. It dates back to the 1943 film. In the novel the mask is once mentioned to be black, and never mentioned again. The mask used during the masquerade ball was naturally red.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_947ac4b0
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_947ac4b0
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_947ac4b0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_a4414a05
type
Adaptation Dye-Job
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_a4414a05
comment
Adaptation Dye-Job: The book Christine was blonde, but in most stage and film productions she's a brunette. Averted in the Hungarian production—Christine is sometimes blonde over there. The actresses seem to have wigs the same colour as their own hair. This is also now averted in the West End production — Emmi Christensson, an alternate Christine, wears a blonde wig. This also counts for Meg, black-haired in the book, but blonde in the musical, is now sometimes dressed in a dark wig. Also averted in the Finnish production.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_a4414a05
featureApplicability
-1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_a4414a05
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_a4414a05
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_a46ea5c1
type
LightFeminineDarkFeminine
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_a46ea5c1
comment
Light Feminine Dark Feminine: Almost universally, Christine and Meg are portrayed as this trope. Although they're occasionally reversed, Christine is usually the Dark and Meg the Light, but you'll almost never find an adaptation where they're both Light or Dark. (In a related trope, in visual adaptations, there's frequently a Blonde, Brunette, Redhead motif with Meg, Christine, and Carlotta respectively.)
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_a46ea5c1
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_a46ea5c1
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_a46ea5c1
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_aba8065b
type
Fatal Flaw
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_aba8065b
comment
Fatal Flaw: The Phantom's...craziness. Christine's naïveté.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_aba8065b
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_aba8065b
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_aba8065b
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_af4d6174
type
Setting Update
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_af4d6174
comment
Setting Update: Over the years, plays and films have been written that reset the story in other venues. Probably the best-known of these is Brian De Palma's 1974 film Phantom of the Paradise, which is set in the rock music industry and pastiches several horror/fantasy stories in addition to Phantom.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_af4d6174
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_af4d6174
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_af4d6174
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_b7e0c5ff
type
Love Triangle
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_b7e0c5ff
comment
Love Triangle: In the 1943 version, oddly enough, it's not Raoul and Erik competing over Christine, but Raoul and a baritone Christine often stars opposite onstage. (The Phantom figure is Christine's father in this case, who wants her back after leaving her in her childhood.) In the end, Christine chooses her career over both of them.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_b7e0c5ff
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_b7e0c5ff
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_b7e0c5ff
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_c691d3f4
type
Offscreen Teleportation
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_c691d3f4
comment
Offscreen Teleportation: Occurs in a couple of the movies, with the '89 version being the most blatant.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_c691d3f4
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_c691d3f4
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_c691d3f4
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_ca967579
type
Torture Cellar
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_ca967579
comment
Torture Cellar: Book and movies only.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_ca967579
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_ca967579
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_ca967579
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_ce6555f0
type
Lighter and Softer
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_ce6555f0
comment
Lighter and Softer: If you're talking about the Lloyd Webber version as opposed to Leroux, there's always the TheaterWorks USA adaptation, which was expressly written to out-Light-and-Softness the Lloyd Webber version itself. (And in all honesty, the Lloyd Webber version comes off far, far darker onstage than it does in the film version.) The Theaterworks version does away with the love triangle altogether, makes Erik into Madame Giry's long-lost son who was burned in a fire in the opera house a few years previously, and has Christine coax him in the end into using his gift to open a music school in order to relieve his bitterness at being unable to perform. All of the denizens of the opera happily approve, and it ends with a song about accepting people who may look different from you. I wish I were making this up. In the meantime the Lloyd Webber version, while very dark and gothic, is still lighter than the book: Erik, instead of looking like a living corpse, has a smaller (though still nasty) deformity, and in contrast to the kill count of the book only Buquet and Piangi die in the show. (Then again, Erik does possibly try to cause the chandelier to fall on Christine, so there you go.) The deformity is less an attempt to lighten the Phantom's look than the fact Lon Chaney-level deformities took too long to apply for a live show and severely limited the actor's ability to sing. The 1962 version is so light and soft that the Phantom doesn't even kill anybody! Instead, a homicidal little person who's friends with the Phantom does all the killing, so the Phantom's hands are technically clean throughout the whole movie. Also, the Phantom has no romantic interest in Christine, just wants to hear his music performed, and performs a Heroic Sacrifice in the end.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_ce6555f0
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_ce6555f0
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_ce6555f0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_d332bf63
type
LampShades
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_d332bf63
comment
Carlotta even lampshades Christine's ingenue status in the musical right before "Prima Donna":
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_d332bf63
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_d332bf63
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_d332bf63
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_d4bf11d1
type
Dramatic Unmask
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_d4bf11d1
comment
Dramatic Unmask: A staple of most versions and possibly even the Trope Codifier for the modern era.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_d4bf11d1
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_d4bf11d1
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_d4bf11d1
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_d7c3ba61
type
Race Lift
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_d7c3ba61
comment
Race Lift: Robert Guillame was cast as the Phantom during the first national tour. Until recently, he was the only African-American actor to play the role—after 26 years, Norm Lewis was the first African-American to play the part on Broadway in 2014. In June 2016, Filipino actress Ali Ewodlt took on the role of Christine, become the first Asian actress to do so, while Jordan Donica became the first African-American to play Raoul. Additionally, Derrick Davis was the second African-American Phantom and Quentin Oliver Lee the third (and the third and fourth overall, respectively) to play the role in the US touring company.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_d7c3ba61
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_d7c3ba61
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_d7c3ba61
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_e35bc0f7
type
Tragic Monster
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_e35bc0f7
comment
Tragic Monster: The Phantom is the epitome of the trope when he isn't being played up as a Draco In Leather Pants.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_e35bc0f7
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_e35bc0f7
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_e35bc0f7
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_e529d5c3
type
Torches and Pitchforks
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_e529d5c3
comment
Torches and Pitchforks: The mob that chases after Erik at the end of the 1925 film, the musical, and in the 2004 version.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_e529d5c3
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_e529d5c3
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_e529d5c3
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_e5e6640b
type
Flanderization
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_e5e6640b
comment
Flanderization: The Phantom has always been something of a Tragic Monster and may sometimes even be a sympathetic figure, but the Schumacher film (to the point of Villain Decay) and the stage musical (to a lesser extent than it's often accused of, especially considering the large amount of free reign the actor's given within certain boundaries) tend to exaggerate this aspect while simultaneously making everyone else unlikeable and downplaying the fact that, whatever else Erik may be, he is also a deeply disturbed and homicidal person. This has also happened to Carlotta over the years. Originally she was part of a Technician Versus Performer comparison, with Carlotta having a marvelous instrument but no soul in her singing as opposed to the more passionate (if rather more erratic) Christine. Over the years this has been simplified to Carlotta's voice being awful (or at least past its prime), to the point where the Schumacher movie depicts opera staff stuffing cotton in their ears when she prepares to sing (thus leading to Informed Flaw, as Margaret Preece's voice is one of the better ones in the film). In reality, a few swings in the Lloyd Webber show can cover both Carlotta and Christine, and Carlotta is almost always played by someone who's been classically trained. It's true that, in the book, Christine was rather naive to believe Erik was actually the angel her father had promised her, and occasionally behaved somewhat immaturely - but she was still essentially a sensible and independent young woman who was under enormous pressure from all sides, told Raoul off for stalking her, did her level best to keep him out of trouble and had a strong enough will to put up with Erik without going completely crazy. However, in a lot of adaptations - such as Susan Kay's Phantom and Nicholas Meyer's 'The Canary Trainer' - she's portrayed as an airhead with the mentality of a child, who can barely even take care of herself.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_e5e6640b
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_e5e6640b
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_e5e6640b
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_ef3d1b57
type
Technician Versus Performer
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_ef3d1b57
comment
This has also happened to Carlotta over the years. Originally she was part of a Technician Versus Performer comparison, with Carlotta having a marvelous instrument but no soul in her singing as opposed to the more passionate (if rather more erratic) Christine. Over the years this has been simplified to Carlotta's voice being awful (or at least past its prime), to the point where the Schumacher movie depicts opera staff stuffing cotton in their ears when she prepares to sing (thus leading to Informed Flaw, as Margaret Preece's voice is one of the better ones in the film). In reality, a few swings in the Lloyd Webber show can cover both Carlotta and Christine, and Carlotta is almost always played by someone who's been classically trained.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_ef3d1b57
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_ef3d1b57
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_ef3d1b57
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_f1d2c779
type
Raven Hair, Ivory Skin
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_f1d2c779
comment
Raven Hair, Ivory Skin: Most presentations of Christine, due to common Adaptation Dye-Job. Emmy Rossum in the 2004 version especially.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_f1d2c779
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_f1d2c779
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_f1d2c779
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_ffb70786
type
Abominable Auditorium
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_ffb70786
comment
Abominable Auditorium: The Opera House is usually functional but also serves as the Phantom's personal playground; in the musical, it's also depicted in the future as a derelict ruin where the staff are auctioning off old props for whatever pennies they can squeeze from the public.
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_ffb70786
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_ffb70786
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_ffb70786
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_name
type
ItemName
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_name
comment
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_name
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_name
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_name
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise) / int_name
itemName
The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
Abominable Auditorium / int_56a86158
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
Adaptational Attractiveness / int_56a86158
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
Coat, Hat, Mask / int_56a86158
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
Crossover Couple / int_56a86158
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
Deathly Unmasking / int_56a86158
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
Depraved Dwarf / int_56a86158
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
Dramatic Unmask / int_56a86158
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
Grave-Marking Scene / int_56a86158
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
He's Just Hiding / int_56a86158
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
Iconic Item / int_56a86158
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
Literary Necrophilia / int_56a86158
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
Lost in Imitation / int_56a86158
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
Mad Artist / int_56a86158
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
Masking the Deformity / int_56a86158
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
Murder the Hypotenuse / int_56a86158
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
Nosebleed / int_56a86158
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
Progressively Prettier / int_56a86158
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
Self-Fanservice / int_56a86158
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
Signature Instrument / int_56a86158
 The Phantom of the Opera (Franchise)
hasFeature
Voice Types / int_56a86158